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Wikipedia

Valley Railway

The Valley Railway was a shortline railroad which operated between the city of Cleveland and small town of Zoarville in the state of Ohio in the United States. The railroad was founded in 1871, but the first segment of track did not open until 1880 and the line was not completed until 1884. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (B&O) obtained a controlling interest in the Valley Railway in 1890. The railroad went bankrupt in 1895, at which time it was reorganized as The Cleveland Terminal and Valley Railroad Company (CT&V). The B&O took over operation of the CT&V in 1909, and the company was merged with the B&O in 1915.

Valley Railway
Overview
HeadquartersCleveland, Ohio, U.S.
Dates of operationAugust 21, 1871 (1871-08-21)–June 1915 (1915-06)
SuccessorBaltimore and Ohio Railroad
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Length75.47 miles (121.46 km)[1]

Traffic on the road declined significantly after the 1920s. CSX, the B&O's successor, abandoned a third of the line in 1984. This portion was acquired by the National Park Service in 1987, and the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad operates on it seasonally. CSX sold about 12 miles (19 km) of track south of Canton to the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway in 1992, and 24 miles (39 km) the track between Akron and Canton to Akron's METRO Regional Transit Authority in 2000. CSX continues some freight operations on the remaining track, which is referred to as the Cleveland, Terminal and Valley Subdivision.

The Valley Railway Historic District (a National Register of Historic Places site) encompasses the former Valley Railway from Independence to Akron. The railway also passes through or is adjacent to a number of other sites listed on the National Register.

Founding the company Edit

 
David L. King

The goal of the Valley Railway was to link the industrial centers of Cleveland and Akron, Ohio, with the coal fields of Stark and Tuscarawas counties.[2][3]

The genesis of the railroad is somewhat unclear, however.

Possible antecedent efforts Edit

Railway historians Sam Tamburro and Juliet Galonska have written that David L. King, a wealthy attorney in Akron, obtained a state charter for an "Akron and Canton Railway" in 1869.[a] This charter was turned over to the Valley Railway in 1871.[2] Ohio state historian Simeon D. Fess, however, mentions no charter for the Akron & Canton effort. Rather, he says Akron and Canton residents attempted to persuade the B&O to build a line between those two cities. They raised $300,000 ($6,900,000 in 2022 dollars) in 1870 for the purchase of land and for construction. But when the railroad declined to build the line, the citizen-investors turned this money over to the Valley Railway in 1871.[9]

Akron area historian Samuel A. Lane also discusses the fundraising attempt. He notes that King was a primary backer of the effort, but mentions no charter. Lane says the effort to build a railroad ended in the spring of 1871 for reasons which were unclear. The idea, however, gave rise to the Valley Railway.[10] Canton railroad historian Craig Sanders also claims that area residents obtained a state charter for the Akron & Canton. However, Sanders says the line began construction 1873, and then ran out of funds. The route must have been different from the Valley Railway's route, as Sanders says both were being built in 1873.[11][b]

Formation of the Valley Railway Edit

Whether there were antecedent roads or not, the Valley Railway Company was incorporated in the state of Ohio on August 21, 1871.[10][13] The incorporators consisted of Henry Chisholm, co-founder and primary investor in the Cleveland Rolling Mill (a steel mill); James Farmer, president of the Ohio National Bank; Samuel Augustus Fuller, founder of the Union Iron Works (a Cleveland iron foundry); David L. King; Nathan P. Payne, a Cleveland coal dealer; and Warrick B. Price, Midwestern real estate developer and former secretary and treasurer of the Milwaukee and Beloit Railroad and the Aetna Iron and Nail Company.[14] The state-issued charter permitted the railroad to construct a line from the city of Cleveland on the shore of Lake Erie south-southeast to the village of Bowerston, Ohio.[13]

The sale of Valley Railway stock began in January 1872. The intent was to sell $150,000 ($3,700,000 in 2022 dollars) in stock in both Akron and Canton, and $500,000 ($12,200,000 in 2022 dollars) in stock in Cleveland.[15] King, the chief organizer of the corporation,[16] raised $191,700 ($4,400,000 in 2022 dollars) from Akron area investors.[10] Sales fell far short in Cleveland,[15] even after the Cleveland Rolling Mill bought $50,000 ($1,200,000 in 2022 dollars) worth of stock.[17]

The company was finally organized on April 24, 1872.[10] Its directors were Farmer, King, and Payne, as well as George Cook (Akron-based director of agricultural implement manufacturer Aultman Miller & Co., and director of the First National Bank of Akron), James A. Saxton (Canton-based founder of the Stark County Bank), John Frederick Seiberling (Akron-based agricultural implement manufacturer), and Andros B. Stone (co-owner of the Cleveland Rolling Mill).[18] The newly-constituted board on May 6 elected Farmer president, King vice president, and incorporator Warrick Price the secretary and treasurer.[19]

Constructing the Valley Railway Edit

The board of directors appointed P.H. Dudley, engineer for the city of Akron, as chief engineer of the Valley Railway.[20] Because the intent of the railroad was to carry very heavy loads of coal to Akron and Cleveland, the board of directors mandated that the route follow a downhill grade between the two cities and that track curves be extremely wide and easy.[21] The board contemplated building a narrow-gauge railway because it would be cheaper. Pressured by King, the board instead opted for the more expensive standard gauge in order to better link with other railroads.[15]

Initial construction efforts Edit

 
Stock certificate of the Valley Railway

The route was surveyed and land purchased during 1872. On February 3, 1873, the railway contracted with Arthur L. Conger and Nicholas E. Vansickle (both of Akron) to build the railroad.[15] Ground was broken in Springfield Township in Summit County in March 1873.[20] The work initially proceeded very swiftly. By mid-August, two-thirds of the line had been graded[20] (from Canton north almost to Cleveland),[9] contracts for all the bridges had been let, and some bridges had even been partially completed.[20] A financial panic hit in September 1873, creating worldwide economic havoc. The Panic of 1873 forced the railroad to indefinitely suspend construction[9] on May 14, 1874.[15]

By fall 1874, the railroad had run out of money and incurred debts of $150,000 ($1,300,000 in 2022 dollars). To resolve the impasse and get construction going again, David L. King agreed to accept the position of president of the railway. He demanded, however, that the members of the board of directors personally assume financial responsibility for paying off the company's liabilities. The board agreed, and King was elected on September 25, 1874.[20] To raise funds for construction, King traveled to Europe in February 1875, but failed to sell any bonds.[22] Two years passed before King was able to interest bankers and investors in Cleveland and New York City to purchase the $6.5 million ($178,600,000 in 2022 dollars) in bonds the railroad needed to complete work.[20]

Walsh & Moynahan, new contractors, were hired, and work resumed on August 7, 1878.[23] Once grading was complete, track began to be laid. The first rail was laid near Old Forge in Akron (near the present-day intersection of N. Arlington Street and North Street)[24] on October 26, 1878. From Akron, rails were laid north toward Cleveland and south toward Canton; in Cleveland, the company began laying rails south to meet the line coming up from Akron.[20]

Completing the line to Canton Edit

Work was once again suspended on January 25, 1879,[20] in a dispute over the quality of work provided by Walsh & Moynahan.[23] A new contractor, the firm of Strong & Carey, was hired, and work resumed on June 3, 1879.[20] When the Valley ran low on cash again, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway (LS&MS) loaned it about $250,000 ($7,900,000 in 2022 dollars) to finish the track.[25][c]

The 57-mile (92 km) line[23] between Cleveland and Canton was completed on October 27, 1879.[26] The first train (which carried important businessmen, civic leaders, clergy, industrialists, and politicians) ran on the line on January 28, 1880.[11][20] Regular freight and passenger traffic began running on February 2, 1880.[3][20]

Completing the line to Bowerston Edit

Work on the remainder of the railroad slowed appreciably. The Valley Railway crossed the Pennsylvania Railroad's Fort Wayne Line in Canton,[27] and followed the valleys of various streams and creeks to reach Mineral City, Ohio,[28] which it did on July 15, 1882.[11] There, it crossed the Pennsylvania Railroad's Tuscarawas Branch.[29] It reached Valley Junction (Zoarville, Ohio) a few months later.[23] Track work beyond Valley Junction was delayed because the Valley Railway had yet to negotiate trackage rights with the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad (W&LE). An agreement was finally reached in late 1882, and became effective January 1, 1883.[11] The remainder of the line was completed swiftly, and in 1884 the Valley Railway between Bowerston and Valley Junction was completed—linking the Valley Railway with the W&LE and points east.[20]

At the time of its completion, the Valley Railway had 75 miles (121 km) of main line track, 19 miles (31 km) of branch track, 35 miles (56 km) of siding, and a 2-mile (3.2 km) spur from Mineral City to a nearby Sieberling-owned coal mine.[30] It linked northeast Ohio's three largest cities, creating a regional transportation corridor.[31]

Valley Railway operational history Edit

 
Restored Brecksville station on the Valley Railway in 2018

Depots Edit

The Valley Railway originally built 16 depots.[23] North to south, these were located at:

In 1884, Akron granted permission for the Valley to build a spur into the heart of the city. On this spur the railroad built a new, larger passenger depot at the intersection of Canal and West Market Streets in 1887.[43] The railroad continued to use the old station at Howard and Ridge Streets until 1971.[39]

Track bed lawsuit Edit

A portion of the Valley Railway's route followed the bed of the abandoned Ohio and Erie Canal.[15] The canal bed was originally owned by the state of Ohio. The railroad asked the Cleveland City Council if it would lease the canal bed to the company, and the council agreed to do so on March 24, 1879.[44] On October 31, 1879, pursuant to previously enacted state law, Governor Richard M. Bishop transferred title to that portion of the canal within the city limits to the city of Cleveland. On November 4, 1879, the city formally leased the canal bed to the Valley Railway[45] for 99 years.[15] Although the value of the land was estimated to be $280,000 ($7,200,000 in 2022 dollars), the city agreed to a one-time payment of $265,000 ($6,900,000 in 2022 dollars), payable in Valley Railway corporate bonds.[45] The railway filled the canal with ballast to create the track bed.[15]

The state of Ohio was displeased that the city had leased the canal bed, and challenged the lease in 1879. A special joint committee was appointed by the Ohio Senate that year to examine the issue, but concluded that the city properly held title to the canal bed and could do with it as it wished. The joint committee's report was subsequently adopted by the Ohio Senate.[45] This did not put an end to the dispute. In late 1895, Ohio Attorney General John K. Richards announced that, in his opinion, the lease to the railroad was illegal. The state then sued to recover the canal bed and evict the railroad.[46] The state legislature adopted a resolution later that year in which it expressed its opinion that the transfer of title to the city had been proper under state law.[47]

Discussions among the city, state, and Valley Railway continued until 1908. That year, an appraiser once more found in favor of the railway. Frustrated, the state attorney general filed a motion in state district court in early March 1908 demanding title to the canal bed.[48] In October of that year, the railway filed a demurrer in the case.[49] The case dragged on into 1910. The 1896 legislative resolution became an issue before the courts, with the state attorney general arguing that a resolution was inadequate to affirm the city's title to the canal bed. Only a bill could have confirmed title, the state argued in March 1910.[47] The district court held for the state of Ohio. The railway appealed, and an appellate court held for the state of Ohio. The railway appealed to the Supreme Court of Ohio.[50] In late January 1912, the Supreme Court of Ohio held in favor of the railway.[51][52]

Baltimore and Ohio takeover Edit

 
The B&O took majority ownership in the Valley Railway in 1889.

The Valley Railroad found itself in tight competition with the Connotton Valley Railway,[36] which opened in January 1882[53][g] and had a similar route into the Tuscarawas County coal fields. Yet, coal was the key to the Valley's financial success: By 1888, 75 percent of the Valley Railway's income came from freight, and 40 percent of its freight tonnage was coal.[36]

The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad (B&O) wanted to gain access to Cleveland, but lacked a route of its own into the city.[3] In the spring of 1889, Taintor & Holt, a New York City investment firm, began buying up the Valley Railroad's stock on behalf of the B&O. The firm turned this stock over to the B&O in the fall of 1889.[20] With the assistance of Valley board member Sylvester T. Everett and Valley president Jeptha Wade, the B&O obtained majority ownership of the Valley Railroad in late 1889. At the board of directors meeting on January 8, 1890, the B&O installed three of its own candidates on the Valley's board of directors. Wade resigned as president, and the new board elected Thomas M. King (a B&O official from Baltimore) president in his place.[55] Sylvester Everett was elected the railroad's new vice president.[56]

 

1895 bankruptcy Edit

The Valley Railway was financially successful. In its first decade, the railroad's main cargoes were coal, copper ore, iron ore, lime, sand, and stone, but it carried much less agricultural produce than had been estimated.[23] By 1892, four trains a day ran the entire length of the railroad, with two additional trains running each day between Cleveland and Akron.[20]

Worldwide financial difficulties led to the Valley Railway's collapse in 1892. They began with the Baring crisis in the United Kingdom, a banking panic which spread to the United States and caused a major recession in 1891. The Valley Railway went into receivership in 1892.[56][57] The railroad might have recovered, but the Panic of 1893 led to another significant downturn in both passengers and freight traffic.[11] The railroad tried to build revenue by constructing a 3-mile (4.8 km) branch from the main line at Willow (Old Brecksville Road) along Mill Creek to E. 76th Street, and then E. 76th Street and Jones Road to Broadway Avenue. This track was intended to serve the old Newburgh area's steel industry, and became known as the Newburgh Branch.[58][h]

Expansion proved unsuccessful. The Valley Railway had been the primary means of travel from Canton to Akron to Cleveland, but in 1895 the Northern Ohio Interurban Railroad opened.[56] This inexpensive light rail service effectively destroyed the Valley Railway's passenger traffic between Cleveland and Akron,[59] eliminating a major source of the company's revenue. The Valley defaulted on its bills and interest payments and went into full bankruptcy on August 2, 1895.[60]

The company was reorganized as the Cleveland Terminal and Valley Railroad (CT&V) on October 3, 1895.[11] As part of the reorganization, the Valley transferred property worth about $250,000 ($8,800,000 in 2022 dollars) to the LS&MS as payment for the 1879 loan.[25]

Cleveland, Terminal and Valley Railway Edit

New Cleveland passenger and freight facilities Edit

 
New 1896 freight depot
 
1896 Riverbed St. freight dock, with McMyler rotary coal hoist
 
New 1898 passenger depot

In February 1896, the CT&V announced it would construct new, larger freight and passenger facilities in Cleveland to accommodate the increased business it was doing in the city. The existing passenger depot at the foot of Seneca Street (now W. 3rd Street) would be demolished and a 500-foot (150 m) long, 125-foot (38 m) deep, two-story station[32] built on the same spot.[61] A 700-foot (210 m) long train shed, parallel to the rear of the depot, would also be built. A trestle would bring the trains up to the level of the station and train shed. The CT&V also acquired 2,500 feet (760 m) of riverfront[32] along Columbus Road, south of Center Street.[62] The company said it would build a second freight station and extensive new docks there,[32] complete with McMyler[63] rotary car dumpers. To connect the new freight station and docks with the main tracks, the railway asked the city to close Lime Street. The total cost of the project was estimated at $500,000 ($17,600,000 in 2022 dollars).[32] The freight station, which also featured derricks to assist with the loading of heavy cargo, was completed in June 1896 and the old freight depot retained as a storage facility.[62] The steel-frame station was 50 feet (15 m) deep and 500 feet (150 m) long, with walls and roofing of sheet metal. There were 25 loading bays on the dock side alone, and traveling overhead cranes facilitated the movement of heavy loads onto pallets or into freight wagons.[63]

As part of the freight expansion, the CT&V built a second freight depot and docks on the Cuyahoga River between Main Avenue and Cathan Avenue (just west of the Superior Avenue Viaduct Bridge). The city of Cleveland, however, wished to widen the Cuyahoga River by 80 feet (24 m) at this point. The city and the railway came to an agreement whereby the city would close West River Street and give this 80 feet (24 m) of land to the railroad. The 80 feet (24 m) of land on which the CT&V docks sat would be removed to allow for the widened river channel. Since the river was a "highway" under state law, the railway agreed to pay an assessment of about $16,500 ($600,000 in 2022 dollars) for "highway improvements"; in return, the city agreed to rebuild the CT&V's docks.[64]

The new passenger depot began construction in September 1897. Designed by local structural engineer A. Lincoln Hyde and architect William Stillman Dutton[61][65] in a modified Gothic Revival style,[65] it was built by contractor C.N. Griffin. The structure was much different than originally projected, just 100-foot (30 m) long and 43-foot (13 m) deep but with three stories rather than two.[61] The roof was of slate, mined in Virginia.[63] The building's steel frame[65] had a first floor facade of rock-faced blue sandstone, while the upper floors were of buff pressed brick[61] trimmed with stone. Turrets at the corners helped to strengthen the building, and clock tower illuminated by floodlights rose from the steeply pitched roof.[65] The clock mechanism was designed and built by the local firm of Scribner and Loehr.[63] The baggage room on the lower level had an asphalt floor.[65] At the main entrance on the first floor was a vestibule from which passengers could pass into the lobby.[61] Men's and women's waiting rooms were located on either side of the lobby.[65] First story flooring consisted of mosaic tile[61] manufactured and installed by the Newcastle Block Pavement Co. of Pittsburgh.[63] The walls were painted a reddish-orange and featured wood wainscoting painted dark green,[65] with oak trim and moldings on the walls and ceiling.[61] An elevator and stairs led from the vestibule to the upper floors.[61] The second floor housed the CT&V's corporate headquarters, and featured mosaic tile flooring and walls painted ecru with oak trim. A large brick pillar, running through the building to the foundation, supported the heavy safes in the auditor's and engineer's offices.[65] The third floor contained the railway's engineering and telegraphy offices,[61] while the attic was used for records storage.[65] The entire interior was electrically lit. The train shed was just 300-foot (91 m) and 90-foot (27 m) wide. The cost of the new passenger station was estimated at $100,000 ($3,500,000 in 2022 dollars).[61] The train shed behind the new station was only the second of its kind erected in the United States. Constructed by the Massillon Bridge Company, it consisted of two levels—one for the receiving of incoming and outgoing passenger traffic, and the other for the making up of trains and the loading of special trains.[63]

 
System map from 1898

Route changes, trackage right leases, and new spurs Edit

With the depression caused by the Panic of 1896 ending, the CT&V did very well financially. It gave the Wheeling & Lake Erie trackage rights over the entire length of the CT&V,[66] built a new freight depot in Cleveland on Seneca Street near the Central Viaduct (a block north of what is now W. 3rd Street and Harrison Street),[67] and purchased 3.4 acres (14,000 m2) between end of its tracks and Lake Erie for use as a rail yard. This land was obtained from the city of Cleveland for $6,000 ($200,000 in 2022 dollars). The CT&V subsequently built up the land so it would no longer flood.[68]

On November 9, 1898, the Sandyville and Waynesburg Railroad was chartered to build a line between the C&TV line at Sandyville northeast about 3 miles (4.8 km) to Waynesburg, Ohio. The line was completed on July 1, 1899, and leased to the CT&V.[69] (The line was originally intended to be 9.5 miles (15.3 km) long.)[70]

In April 1899, the Davis Railway Co. constructed a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) extension of the spur at Mineral City. This branch pushed east along Huff Run to Linden (an unincorporated crossroads hamlet)[71] and the Davis Mine No. 2 coal mine. The entire 4.9-mile (7.9 km) length of the spur from Valley Junction to the mine became known as the Huff Run Branch. Mining was so important in the area that the Huff Run Branch later added 2.63 miles (4.23 km) of second track and 7.53 miles (12.12 km) of sidings.[72]

The B&O was threatened with losing access to many of the southern Ohio markets it relied on in 1899. The first threat came from the Cleveland and Marietta Railway. In 1872, it built a branch line from Marietta, Ohio, to the B&O main line at Harmer Junction.[73] This allowed B&O and CT&V freight to be shipped on the Cleveland and Marietta (C&M) directly to Cleveland (or to be transferred at Canton and shipped to Cleveland). The Cleveland and Marietta said it would no longer accept freight for either railroad beginning January 1, 1900.[74] That same year, the Wheeling & Lake Erie acquired the Cleveland, Canton and Southern Railroad, whose track from Cleveland to Canton and then to Coshocton and Zanesville. The W&LE said it would cancel the CT&V's trackage rights,[3] which threatened to cut the CT&V completely off from all southern routes and markets. In response, the CT&V began to swiftly survey a route from Valley Junction to Canal Dover (now Dover)[75] and then to Newark, Ohio,[74][76] which would give it a link to the B&O's main line and threaten to eat significantly into traffic on both the C&M and the W&LE. To avoid construction of an independently owned new main line, the Pennsylvania Railroad agreed to give the B&O subsidiary trackage rights between Valley Junction and Canal Dover. At Canal Dover, the CT&V connected with the Lake Shore and Tuscarawas Valley Railroad (now operating as the Cleveland, Lorain and Wheeling Railroad).[3]

The CT&V thrived financially, and so did business along its route—and the railway expanded to meet this demand. In 1900, the Cleveland-Boston Bag Co. built a large mill near the tiny hamlet of Boston Mills to take advantage of the railroad. Boston Mills soon grew into a town.[33] In 1904, the railroad built a 4-mile (6.4 km) spur from Willow (the modern intersection of Fuhrmeyer Road and Old Brecksville Road) along Mill Creek to connect with the Cleveland Short Line Railway near what is now E. 73rd Street and Deveny Avenue in Cleveland.[77] That same year, the railway spent $115,000 ($3,700,000 in 2022 dollars) strengthening all the bridges along its route, and even rebuilding some older ones, so that it could haul heavier loads and use new, heavier, more powerful locomotives.[78] In 1905, the Jaite Paper Mill opened 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Boston Mills to take advantage of open land near the railroad as well.[79]

New B&O rail yard Edit

 
B&O rail yard in 1946 (top center) with roundhouse visible

In 1906, the B&O closed the existing CT&V roundhouse[80] and built a $400,000 ($13,000,000 in 2022 dollars), much larger roundhouse and rail yard on W. 3rd Street in Cleveland. The 10-stall semicircular roundhouse measured 280 feet (85 m) on the outside and 145 feet (44 m) on the inside and cost $45,347 ($1,500,000 in 2022 dollars). Another $200,000 ($6,500,000 in 2022 dollars) was spent building the rail yard.[81]

Other improvements included:[81]

  • A $12,500 ($400,000 in 2022 dollars), 150-by-50-foot (46 by 15 m), 14-foot (4.3 m) deep cinder pit located about 85 feet (26 m) south of the new roundhouse;
  • A $26,370 ($900,000 in 2022 dollars), 725-by-30-foot (221.0 by 9.1 m) sand house and coal tipple located south of the new cinder pit;
  • A two-story brick resthouse for trainmen northwest of the roundhouse, with second-floor reading and sleeping rooms;
  • A one-story machine, blacksmith, and engine and boiler repair shop made of brick attached to the north end of the roundhouse;
  • An $11,000 ($400,000 in 2022 dollars), 120-by-30-foot (36.6 by 9.1 m) storehouse and oilhouse north of the roundhouse; and
  • $145,000 ($4,700,000 in 2022 dollars) in infrastructure improvements, which included a steam heating plant, smokestack, fresh water system, drain and sewer system, blow-off lines, and two 50,000-US-gallon (190,000 L) water tanks.

Bridge replacements in Cleveland Edit

 
A freighter wedged against the CTV's Center Street swing bridge in 1904. The company's lawsuit over damage to the bridge went to the U.S. Supreme Court.

A controversy broke out in 1905 over whether the CT&V would be required to replace its railroad bridge over the Cuyahoga River. At issue was a swing bridge over the Old Ship Channel of the Cuyahoga River.[i] The Constitution of the United States and various federal court rulings gave the federal government control over all navigable waters,[83] and the United States Army Corps of Engineers (tasked under federal law with improving navigable waters) asserted the right to regulate the bridge. The Corps wanted the bridge removed or replaced, since the center pier of the bridge hindered traffic in the Old Ship Channel and the embankment spans, when open, used up space which the Corps wished to use for new docks. The CT&V, however, argued that the 1825 changes to the river rendered the Old Ship Channel and the New Ship Channel man-made waterways and hence not subject to federal jurisdiction.[84] Local hearings were held which documented the hindrance to water traffic,[85] and the railroad agreed in April 1905 to remove the swing bridge no later than April 1, 1907.[86] Secretary of War William Howard Taft then intervened, ordering the bridge gone by April 1, 1906.[87] Although the railroad objected to the tight timeframe,[88] it went ahead with plans for the new bridge as ordered. The railroad proposed a replacing the existing structure with a Scherzer rolling lift bridge, a plan which was approved in August 1905.[89] The new bridge opened in September 1906. Designed by the Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge Co., manufactured by the King Bridge Co., and erected by the Pittsburgh Construction Co., the double-track, 230-foot (70 m) bridge[90][91] cost $180,000 ($5,900,000 in 2022 dollars).[92]

The B&O, of its own accord, then rebuilt two more bridges in Cleveland. The first was over the Cuyahoga River near what is now Quigley Road and W. 3rd Street.[91] The 230-foot (70 m) rolling lift bridge[93] was built by the King Bridge Co. and completed in July.[94] Planning for replacement of a second bridge, this one spanning the Cuyahoga at what is now Carter Road (on the west bank) and W. 3rd Street (on the east bank), began in June 1908.[95] Originally, this rolling lift bridge was to be 160 feet (49 m) long and cost $200,000 ($6,500,000 in 2022 dollars).[96] Construction of the bridge was delayed, however, when the city of Cleveland began planning for a new viaduct over the Cuyahoga River valley near the same location. By November 1908, the city had decided to widen the river at this location, and asked the railroad to construct a longer bridge.[97] Discussions between the city and railroad ensued, and it was not until August 1909 that both sides agreed to a $275,000 ($9,000,000 in 2022 dollars), 200-foot (61 m) long rolling lift bridge. Built by the Pennsylvania Steel Co.,[98] construction took nearly 18 months. Taking into account its piers, abutments, and approaches, it was the largest rolling lift bridge in the world.[95][99]

The company also repaired a swing bridge just downstream from what is now the Center Street Bridge. This swing bridge was severely damaged when floods sent three ships crashing against the bridge.[100] The CT&V sued for damages, and the case went to the United States Supreme Court. The Supreme Court held in Cleveland Terminal and Valley R. Co. v. Cleveland S. S. Co., 208 U.S. 316 (1908), that bridge piers, bridge protective pilings, and docks were not "aids to navigation" and thus damage to them by a ship (even if on navigable waters) was not a cause for action under United States maritime law.[101]

B&O takeover Edit

In June 1909, the B&O assumed active management of the CT&V.[11][102] This ended a process initiated in 1901, when the parent company began unifying operations with the subsidiary (beginning with a single ticket structure).[103] During this period of active management, the B&O built a CT&V rail yard at Canal Dover in 1911.[104][105]

The B&O fully absorbed the CT&V in 1915.[58][106][107]

CT&V operations under the B&O Edit

 
The CT&V's Magnolia Branch (in green), abandoned in 1924

In the early 20th century, the B&O offered three round-trip passenger trains a day between Cleveland and Canton on the CT&V tracks. One of these continued to Marietta.[108] The high frequency of passenger trains was needed because the B&O's Chicago-to-Jersey City service ran through both Akron and Wheeling. The connection between Cleveland and Akron took on additional importance when, in January 1918, the B&O ceased to run passenger trains through Wheeling, and all of its passenger service went through Akron.[3] The B&O the CT&V line between Akron and Cleveland early in the 20th century to make it a better freight route.[54] However, the rapid availability of the automobile led to severe losses in passenger revenues, and the increasing use of trucks to move bulk goods significantly reduced freight traffic.[109] Passenger service to Marietta ended on July 18, 1933, and passenger service to Valley Junction ended on September 30, 1934.[108]

Slowly, the B&O began reducing the reach of the old Valley Railway. The B&O abandoned the Magnolia Branch in January 1924.[110] It abandoned its track between Valley Junction and Mineral City in 1936, due to construction of the Dover Dam flood control project[111] and realigned another 2.5 miles (4.0 km) of track to avoid the new reservoir.[112] About 5.25 miles (8.45 km) of track were also realigned due to construction of the Wills Creek Dam,[113] 8.1 miles (13.0 km) of track realigned due to construction of the Beach City Dam,[114] and 5.3 miles (8.5 km) of track realigned due to construction of the Bolivar Dam.[115][j] The new route involved building a four-span bridge over Sandy Creek. At Mineral City, the CT&V was forced to build two wooden trestles to accommodate flood control projects. One of these was 860 feet (260 m) long and crossed a tributary of Huff Run as well as two roads.[28] The CT&V abandoned its main line north of Walnut Street in Massillon due to straightening of the Tuscarawas River, and converted its industrial spur on the city's east side into a new main line.[116][k] The railroad abandoned and removed the Huff Run Branch from Valley Junction to Mineral City in 1938 following eight years of disuse.[118]

In June 1934, the CT&V moved its passenger station to Cleveland's new Terminal Tower. The 1897 passenger station on Canal Road was converted into a freight depot.[58]

The CT&V realigned the entire 14.4-mile (23.2 km) route between Beach City and Mineral City and 1.5 miles (2.4 km) around East Sparta in 1938, to accommodate the Muskingum River Conservation District's flood control initiatives.[119]

Passenger travel on the former CT&V increased somewhat during World War II, but declined sharply again afterward.[120] The B&O ceased all passenger service on the line on December 7, 1962. The last passenger train to run on the old CT&V route was the Cleveland Night Express, which provided overnight service to Baltimore.[58] It abandoned the Newburgh Branch in 1964.

Post-B&O history of the line Edit

The Chesapeake and Ohio Railway (C&O) took control of the B&O on February 4, 1963. The two railroads retained their separate identities until merging into the Chessie System on June 15, 1973.[108]

A scenic railroad began operating on a portion of the old Valley Railway in 1975. The scenic railroad was first conceived in 1967. With little freight and no passenger traffic on the line, Henry Lucas (an official with the Cuyahoga County Fair) and Siegfried Buerling (director of the Hale Farm historic site) suggested that a "tourist railroad" be allowed to use the tracks. The B&O refused. Backers of a scenic railroad continued to press ahead, and in 1975 the Chessie System gave its approval.[121] The Cuyahoga Valley Line Scenic Railroad[120] (now known as the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad) began operation in June 1975.[122]

The Chessie System merged with the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in November 1980 to form CSX.[123] In 1984, CSX abandoned the remainder of the Huff Run Branch as well as all of its line between Sandyville and Mineral City.

CSX sales of the line Edit

 
A Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad train idles at Rockside Road in Independence, Ohio in 2017

On September 5, 1984, CSX announced it would abandon the Valley Railway track between Akron and Independence.[121] The National Park Service subsequently began negotiating to buy these 26 miles (42 km)[124] of track to add to the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area[121] (which had been established on December 29, 1974,[125] and became a national park on October 11, 2000).[126] The sale was finalized on September 28, 1987.[121] The northern terminus of the Park Service's track is at Independence (Granger Road and Interstate 77, approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the Rockside station), after which CSX resumes ownership of the track.[127][128] The southern terminus of the Park Service's track is at the Akron station, at which point CSX ownership of the track resumed.[128][129]

CSX subsequently sold two more portions of the old Valley Railway. In October 1992, CSX sold 12.26 miles (19.73 km)[130] of track between Canton and Sandyville to a new Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad (which had recently been spun off by the Norfolk Southern Railway). In May 2000, Akron's METRO Regional Transit Authority purchased 24 miles (39 km) of track between Akron and Canton from CSX in May 2000.[131][l] Metro provides trackage rights to the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad and two freight railroads, the W&LE and the Akron Barberton Cluster Railway.[131][m]

CSX still owns and uses for freight the remainder of the Valley Railway (which it calls the Cleveland Terminal and Valley Subdivision) between Independence and Cleveland. It is unclear when the 0.6 miles (0.97 km) of track between the end of the line (on Whiskey Island) and Literary Road (near W. 3rd Street), or the 26 miles (42 km) of track between Valley Junction and Bowerston, was abandoned. The portion between Literary Road and Quigley Road (near Interstate 490), about 0.4 miles (0.64 km), was abandoned in 1983. Freight train use of the remaining portion of CT&V Subdivision is light, and as of 1992 the track was not in good enough condition to accommodate passenger trains.[133]

The Valley Railway line, as completed Edit

 
The Valley Railway's Huff Run Branch (in green) in 1912

As of 1906, the Valley Railroad had 75.47 miles (121.46 km) of main track and 4.48 miles (7.21 km) of secondary track;[1] 79.64 miles (128.17 km) of main and secondary track siding and yards; 11.3 miles (18.2 km) of branch and spur track; and 8.95 miles (14.40 km) of branch and spur track siding and yards.[134] About 7 miles (11 km) of track were in the Cleveland city limits.[58]

The railroad had three branch lines: the Huff Run Branch (about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from Mineral City east to Lindentree), the Magnolia Branch (about 2.88 miles (4.63 km) from Sandyville along Sandy Creek to Magnolia),[135][n] and the Newburg Branch (about 3 miles (4.8 km) from Granger Road, following Mill Creek, to Broadway Avenue).[58]

The railroad had a number of spurs, which served: the Independence stone quarry,[o] the Schumacher "State Quarry" at Deep Lock,[p] the Lawson Waterman quarry at Peninsula,[q] the Lawson Waterman quarry at Deep Lock,[r] the Jaite Paper Mill at Boston Mills, downtown Akron,[43] and the Newburgh Line (through and north of what is now Bacci Park).

The railroad also owned at least three rail yards. The first was the Cleveland terminal yard, built at the end of the line opposite Whiskey Island in downtown Cleveland.[68] It was replaced in 1906 by the B&O Clark Avenue yard on W. 3rd Street.[81] The third rail yard was located in Dover, Ohio.[105] It is unclear when this yard was abandoned.

Historic sites and districts Edit

 
The Jaite Company Store at the Jaite Mill Historic District

The Valley Railway Historic District encompasses the former Valley Railway from Independence to downtown Akron. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1985.[140] Much of the railroad runs parallel or adjacent to the Ohio and Erie Canal (added to the NRHP in 1966).[141] The railroad tracks also pass through the Everett Historic District (added to the NRHP in 1993)[142] and the Peninsula Village Historic District (added to the NRHP in 1974)[143] and adjacent to the Boston Mills Historic District (added to the NRHP in 1992)[144] and the Cascade Locks Historic District (added to the NRHP in 1992).[145]

A Valley Railway spur ran to the Jaite Mill Historic District (added to the NRHP in 1979),[146] and the railway also passed close to Hale Farm and Village (added to the NRHP in 1973).[147]

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes
  1. ^ The state of Ohio lists no charter for an "Akron and Canton Railway" or any similarly named effort between January 1, 1867 and June 30, 1871.[4][5][6][7][8]
  2. ^ Elsewhere, Sanders says that another "Akron and Canton Railroad" was planned in the 1830s, but this project was never begun.[12]
  3. ^ The LS&MS had close relations with Standard Oil, and shipped much of its oil. The Valley Railway's tracks ran past Standard Oil's large Cleveland refinery, and linked with the LS&MS in downtown Cleveland.[25]
  4. ^ The passenger depot was located on the south side of Canal Road just before it met Columbus Road. The company also owned about 1,900 feet (580 m) of docks on the Cuyahoga River just south of the passenger depot. A separate freight station existed on Merwin Avenue between West and James Streets.[32]
  5. ^ Unionville was renamed in honor of Sylvester T. Everett, the Valley Railroad's vice president and treasurer.[36]
  6. ^ Ira was located at the intersection of Ira Road and Riverview Road.[35]
  7. ^ The Connotton Valley Railroad reached Mogadore (a hamlet east of Akron) in 1881, Cleveland in 1882, and Zanesville in 1889. It converted to standard gauge on November 18, 1888, and was renamed the Cleveland, Canton and Southern Railroad on May 17, 1890. It went into receivership on September 15, 1893, and was acquired by the W&LE on August 5, 1899.[54]
  8. ^ It included two southwest spurs at Old Brecksville Road; a spur east through Bacci Park almost to Donovan Drive; and two spurs at about Bletch Ct., one parallel and north to the branch and the other east and then south (along Warner Road).
  9. ^ When white settlers arrived in Ohio in 1796, the Cuyahoga River followed the Old Ship Channel, also known as the Old River Bed, before turning sharply to enter Lake Erie about 1 mile (1.6 km) west of its current mouth. The twisting mouth of the river inhibited ship traffic upstream, however, and in 1825 the current, straight mouth of the river was dug. This new mouth of the Cuyahoga was widened in 1854. Over time, sand bars built up which sealed off the old mouth of the river from the lake.[82]
  10. ^ The work extended from two miles north of East Sparta, Ohio, to a mile south of Sandyville, Ohio.[115]
  11. ^ The railroad anticipated realigning another 5.86 miles (9.43 km) of track due to construction of Freeport Reservoir,[117] but county commissioners decided not to build that dam.[116]
  12. ^ This track begins at Howard Street in Akron, at the southern terminus of the National Park Service track. It travels 1.6 miles (2.6 km) east, 4.76 miles (7.66 km) south, and then 3.1 miles (5.0 km) southeast to the city of Green, Ohio. It continues another 11.7 miles (18.8 km) southeast before entering Canton. The line travels about 3.9 miles (6.3 km) through Canton before terminating at the Canton Crossing Diamond, where it connects to the W&LE and the Norfolk Southern.[132]
  13. ^ W&LE's trackage rights stem from a 1992 lease of 10.25 miles (16.50 km)[130] of this track between Canton and Aultman.[108]
  14. ^ Although the CT&V leased a line from Magnolia to Waynesburg,[69] it did not own this track and thus is not included in the description of the Magnolia Line in this article.
  15. ^ Located at what is now 8900 Hemlock Road in Independence, Ohio.[136]
  16. ^ Located at what is now Deep Lock Quarry Metro Park at 5779 Riverview Road in Summit County.[137]
  17. ^ Located at 1980 West Streetsboro Road in Peninsula, Ohio.[138]
  18. ^ Also part of Deep Lock Quarry Metro Park.[139]
Citations
  1. ^ a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906, p. 226.
  2. ^ a b Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xiii.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Sanders 2007, p. 9.
  4. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868a, pp. generally.
  5. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868b, pp. generally.
  6. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1870, p. generally.
  7. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1871, p. generally.
  8. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1872, p. generally.
  9. ^ a b c Fess 1937, p. 174.
  10. ^ a b c d Lane 1892, p. 631.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Sanders 2009, p. 8.
  12. ^ Sanders 2007, p. 7.
  13. ^ a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1883, p. 375.
  14. ^ "Valley Railway Company". The Pittsburgh Commercial. September 9, 1871. p. 2. Retrieved October 17, 2017.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xv.
  16. ^ Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xii.
  17. ^ "The Valley Railway". The Plain Dealer. February 26, 1872. p. 3.
  18. ^ "The Valley Railway". The Plain Dealer. April 25, 1872. p. 3.
  19. ^ "The Valley Railway". The Plain Dealer. May 7, 1872. p. 3.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lane 1892, p. 632.
  21. ^ Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xiv.
  22. ^ Tamburro & Galonska 2002, pp. xv–xvi.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xvi.
  24. ^ Price 2015, p. 22.
  25. ^ a b c "Big Transfer of Land". The Plain Dealer. March 4, 1896. p. 10.
  26. ^ "The Valley Railway Completed Between Cleveland and Canton". The Plain Dealer. October 28, 1879. p. 1.
  27. ^ Sanders 2009, p. 45.
  28. ^ a b Sanders 2009, p. 72.
  29. ^ Sanders 2009, p. 74.
  30. ^ Lane 1892, p. 633.
  31. ^ Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. x.
  32. ^ a b c d e f "Immense Docks". The Plain Dealer. February 25, 1896. p. 1.
  33. ^ a b Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xvii.
  34. ^ a b Lane 1892, p. 655.
  35. ^ a b Kovacs, Rosemary (April 19, 1973). "Map and Memories Preserve Old Towns". The Plain Dealer. p. A15.
  36. ^ a b c Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xvix.
  37. ^ Lane 1892, p. 133.
  38. ^ Lane 1892, p. 640.
  39. ^ a b Sanders 2007, p. 11.
  40. ^ Lane 1892, p. 988.
  41. ^ Ohio Co-operative Topographic Survey 1911, p. 175.
  42. ^ Lane 1892, pp. 655, 800.
  43. ^ a b Tamburro & Galonska 2002, pp. xvi–xvii.
  44. ^ "The Valley Railway". The Plain Dealer. March 25, 1879. p. 1.
  45. ^ a b c "Not State Land". The Plain Dealer. April 17, 1896.
  46. ^ "Perfectly Safe". The Plain Dealer. January 2, 1896. p. 3.
  47. ^ a b "State Opens Case To Oust Railroad". The Plain Dealer. March 10, 1910. p. 5.
  48. ^ "Questions State's Right to Be Suing". The Plain Dealer. March 11, 1908. p. 5.
  49. ^ "Railway Claims Canal". The Plain Dealer. October 21, 1908. p. 5.
  50. ^ "Little Stories Of Ohio Capital". The Plain Dealer. December 21, 1911. p. 12.
  51. ^ "Holds Cases Different". The Plain Dealer. February 5, 1912. p. 7.
  52. ^ Cleveland, Terminal & Valley Railroad Company, et al. v. The State ex rel., 85 O.S. 251 (Ohio 1912).
  53. ^ Kennedy 1885, p. 30.
  54. ^ a b Sanders 2007, p. 10.
  55. ^ "The Deal Clinched". The Plain Dealer. January 9, 1890. p. 2.
  56. ^ a b c Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xx.
  57. ^ "The Valley Dies". The Plain Dealer. June 17, 1892. p. 8.
  58. ^ a b c d e f "Baltimore & Ohio Railroad". Encyclopedia of Cleveland. 2017. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  59. ^ Bruce 1952, pp. 407–408.
  60. ^ "To Be Sold". The Plain Dealer. August 3, 1895. p. 6.
  61. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The New Cleveland, Terminal & Valley Depot". The Plain Dealer. September 5, 1897. p. 1.
  62. ^ a b "New Freight House". The Plain Dealer. June 14, 1896. p. 6.
  63. ^ a b c d e f The Railway Agent 1898, p. 85.
  64. ^ "Came to Terms". The Plain Dealer. November 21, 1896. p. 1.
  65. ^ a b c d e f g h i The Railway Agent 1898, p. 83.
  66. ^ "Over the Valley". The Plain Dealer. January 2, 1897. p. 10.
  67. ^ "New Depot". The Plain Dealer. April 1, 1897. p. 1.
  68. ^ a b "A Big Contract". The Plain Dealer. June 8, 1897. p. 10.
  69. ^ a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906, p. 128.
  70. ^ "Construction". The Railway Age. March 17, 1890. p. 190. Retrieved July 3, 2018.
  71. ^ "The Work in Progress". The Railway Age. April 7, 1899. p. 264. Retrieved July 3, 2018.
  72. ^ Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company 1902, p. 64.
  73. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906, pp. 96–97.
  74. ^ a b "Valley to Be Extended". The Plain Dealer. December 20, 1899. p. 6.
  75. ^ Miller 2000, p. 75.
  76. ^ "New Roads and Projects". Railway and Engineering Review. December 23, 1899. p. 727.
  77. ^ "Railroad News". The Plain Dealer. May 21, 1904. p. 5.
  78. ^ "Railroad News". The Plain Dealer. November 25, 1904. p. 3.
  79. ^ Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xviii.
  80. ^ Sanders 2014, p. 15.
  81. ^ a b c "B. & O. Plans To Spend $400,000". The Plain Dealer. August 12, 1906. p. 1.
  82. ^ Mansfield 1899, pp. 299–300.
  83. ^ Linsley & Franzini 1974, p. 108.
  84. ^ Couch, W.S. (February 3, 1905). "Have An Army of Witnesses". The Plain Dealer. pp. 1, 2.
  85. ^ "Hearing On B. & O. Bridge". The Plain Dealer. March 12, 1905. p. 2.
  86. ^ "Agrees To Remove Bridge". The Plain Dealer. April 4, 1905. p. 12.
  87. ^ "Bridge Must Go". The Plain Dealer. May 11, 1905. p. 3.
  88. ^ "Railroads Want Delay". The Plain Dealer. May 12, 1905. p. 3.
  89. ^ "Plans Are Approved". The Plain Dealer. August 10, 1905. p. 5.
  90. ^ Camp, Walter Mason (March 23, 1907). "New Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge at Cleveland". The Railway and Engineering Review. pp. 257–258. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  91. ^ a b Bluestone 1978, p. 86.
  92. ^ "Railroad News". The Plain Dealer. September 8, 1905. p. 3.
  93. ^ "Big Lift Bridge to Span Cuyahoga River". The Plain Dealer. April 19, 1907. p. 10.
  94. ^ "Bridge Is Completed". The Plain Dealer. July 31, 1907. p. 12.
  95. ^ a b Bluestone 1978, p. 96.
  96. ^ "B. & O. Won't Wait For New Viaduct". The Plain Dealer. June 25, 1908. p. 12.
  97. ^ "Wants Change In New Bridge Plans". The Plain Dealer. November 12, 1908. p. 12.
  98. ^ "To Replace Old Bridge". The Plain Dealer. August 9, 1909. p. 10.
  99. ^ "New B. & O. Bridge Finished". The Plain Dealer. March 12, 1911. p. A6.
  100. ^ Secretary of War 1904, pp. 3806–3807.
  101. ^ Cleveland Terminal and Valley R. Co. v. Cleveland S. S. Co., 208 U.S. 316 (U.S. 1908).
  102. ^ Metzger & Bobel 2009, p. 174.
  103. ^ "Many Important Changes". The Plain Dealer. June 16, 1901. p. 8.
  104. ^ Sanders 2009, p. 71.
  105. ^ a b "Yards at Canal Dover". Industrial World. April 24, 1911. p. 489. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  106. ^ "Begin Fight On Ohio Slag Rates". The Plain Dealer. November 4, 1915. p. 16.
  107. ^ Ori 2006, p. 11.
  108. ^ a b c d Sanders 2009, p. 61.
  109. ^ Tamburro & Galonska 2002, pp. xxi–xxii.
  110. ^ "Legal Notices". New Philadelphia Daily Times. December 28, 1923. p. 7; "Order Magnolia Branch R.R. Abandoned". New Philadelphia Daily Times. January 29, 1924. p. 8. Retrieved November 13, 2018.
  111. ^ "53 Miles of Railway Relocated in Ohio Flood-Control Project". Railway Age. September 5, 1936. pp. 345–350; "Engineers Get Ready for Construction Dover Dam". Zanesville Times Recorder. April 6, 1935. p. 1.
  112. ^ "Chief Railroad Appraisal Engineer Named". Zanesville Times Recorder. February 25, 1935. p. 1.
  113. ^ "Turn First Dirt Today in Building Wills Creek Dam". Zanesville Times Recorder. March 12, 1935. pp. 1, 5.
  114. ^ "Canton Firm is Low Bidder on Rail Reloation". Zanesville Times Recorder. May 8, 1935. p. 4.
  115. ^ a b "Bid of Local Company Low". Massillon Evening Independent. July 11, 1935. p. 2.
  116. ^ a b "Straightening of Tuscarawas River In City Approved". Massillon Evening Independent. April 16, 1935. p. 1.
  117. ^ "$1,850,000 River Straightening Project for Massillon". Massillon Evening Independent. February 14, 1935. pp. 1, 8.
  118. ^ "May Abandon Line". Massillon Evening Independent. November 5, 1937. p. 22; "B&O To Drop Branch". Marion Star. December 22, 1937. p. 2.
  119. ^ "Railway Construction in the United States". Railway Age. January 7, 1939. p. 74. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
  120. ^ a b Tamburro & Galonska 2002, p. xxii.
  121. ^ a b c d Sanders 2007, p. 93.
  122. ^ "Chugging Out of History". The Plain Dealer. June 1, 1975. p. AA2; Ellison, Bruce (November 23, 1975). "Overcrowded National Parks Create an Operational Tightrope". The Plain Dealer. p. E2.
  123. ^ "Chessie, Seaboard Merge Into Largest Rail Network". The Plain Dealer. November 3, 1980. p. E10.
  124. ^ Volpe National Transportation Systems Center 2013, p. 1.
  125. ^ Brazaitis, Thomas J. (December 29, 1974). "Ford Signs Cuyahoga Valley Park Bill". The Plain Dealer. pp. A1, A5.
  126. ^ Hetter, Katia (June 13, 2013). "Cuyahoga Valley: A spiritual retreat". CNN. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  127. ^ Surface Transportation Board 1998, p. 5—311.
  128. ^ a b Volpe National Transportation Systems Center 2013, p. 50.
  129. ^ Parsons Brinckerhoff 2002, p. 3—32.
  130. ^ a b Surface Transportation Board, Department of Transportation. STB Finance Docket No. 34341. "Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway Company--Acquisition and Operation Exemption--CSX Transportation, Inc. 68 FR 59680. October 16, 2003
  131. ^ a b Bergmann Associates 2012, p. 46.
  132. ^ Bergmann Associates 2012, p. 28.
  133. ^ Burnett, Thomas M. (September 7, 1992). "Plan to Extend Rail Is Picking Up Steam". The Plain Dealer. p. B2.
  134. ^ Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906, p. 227.
  135. ^ Sanders 2009, p. 62.
  136. ^ Zurick, Maura (July 14, 2014). "200 years of Independence". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved October 26, 2017.
  137. ^ "Deep Lock Quarry". Summit County Parks. 2017. Retrieved October 26, 2017.
  138. ^ Fellenstein, Stephanie (July 8, 2015). "Oh, the places we'll go". Gatehouse Media. Retrieved October 26, 2017.
  139. ^ Downing, Bob (March 2, 2008). "UA team unearths historic sites". Akron Beacon Journal. Retrieved October 26, 2017.
  140. ^ Valley Railway Historic District
  141. ^ Ohio and Erie Canal
  142. ^ Everett Historic District
  143. ^ Peninsula Village Historic District
  144. ^ Boston Mills Historic District
  145. ^ Cascade Locks Historic District
  146. ^ Jaite Mill Historic District
  147. ^ Jonathan Hale Homestead

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valley, railway, confused, with, valley, railroad, shortline, railroad, which, operated, between, city, cleveland, small, town, zoarville, state, ohio, united, states, railroad, founded, 1871, first, segment, track, open, until, 1880, line, completed, until, 1. Not to be confused with Valley Railroad The Valley Railway was a shortline railroad which operated between the city of Cleveland and small town of Zoarville in the state of Ohio in the United States The railroad was founded in 1871 but the first segment of track did not open until 1880 and the line was not completed until 1884 The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad B amp O obtained a controlling interest in the Valley Railway in 1890 The railroad went bankrupt in 1895 at which time it was reorganized as The Cleveland Terminal and Valley Railroad Company CT amp V The B amp O took over operation of the CT amp V in 1909 and the company was merged with the B amp O in 1915 Valley RailwayOverviewHeadquartersCleveland Ohio U S Dates of operationAugust 21 1871 1871 08 21 June 1915 1915 06 SuccessorBaltimore and Ohio RailroadTechnicalTrack gauge4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm standard gaugeLength75 47 miles 121 46 km 1 Traffic on the road declined significantly after the 1920s CSX the B amp O s successor abandoned a third of the line in 1984 This portion was acquired by the National Park Service in 1987 and the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad operates on it seasonally CSX sold about 12 miles 19 km of track south of Canton to the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway in 1992 and 24 miles 39 km the track between Akron and Canton to Akron s METRO Regional Transit Authority in 2000 CSX continues some freight operations on the remaining track which is referred to as the Cleveland Terminal and Valley Subdivision The Valley Railway Historic District a National Register of Historic Places site encompasses the former Valley Railway from Independence to Akron The railway also passes through or is adjacent to a number of other sites listed on the National Register Contents 1 Founding the company 1 1 Possible antecedent efforts 1 2 Formation of the Valley Railway 2 Constructing the Valley Railway 2 1 Initial construction efforts 2 2 Completing the line to Canton 2 3 Completing the line to Bowerston 3 Valley Railway operational history 3 1 Depots 3 2 Track bed lawsuit 3 3 Baltimore and Ohio takeover 3 4 1895 bankruptcy 4 Cleveland Terminal and Valley Railway 4 1 New Cleveland passenger and freight facilities 4 2 Route changes trackage right leases and new spurs 4 3 New B amp O rail yard 4 4 Bridge replacements in Cleveland 5 B amp O takeover 5 1 CT amp V operations under the B amp O 6 Post B amp O history of the line 6 1 CSX sales of the line 7 The Valley Railway line as completed 8 Historic sites and districts 9 See also 10 References 11 BibliographyFounding the company Edit nbsp David L KingThe goal of the Valley Railway was to link the industrial centers of Cleveland and Akron Ohio with the coal fields of Stark and Tuscarawas counties 2 3 The genesis of the railroad is somewhat unclear however Possible antecedent efforts Edit Railway historians Sam Tamburro and Juliet Galonska have written that David L King a wealthy attorney in Akron obtained a state charter for an Akron and Canton Railway in 1869 a This charter was turned over to the Valley Railway in 1871 2 Ohio state historian Simeon D Fess however mentions no charter for the Akron amp Canton effort Rather he says Akron and Canton residents attempted to persuade the B amp O to build a line between those two cities They raised 300 000 6 900 000 in 2022 dollars in 1870 for the purchase of land and for construction But when the railroad declined to build the line the citizen investors turned this money over to the Valley Railway in 1871 9 Akron area historian Samuel A Lane also discusses the fundraising attempt He notes that King was a primary backer of the effort but mentions no charter Lane says the effort to build a railroad ended in the spring of 1871 for reasons which were unclear The idea however gave rise to the Valley Railway 10 Canton railroad historian Craig Sanders also claims that area residents obtained a state charter for the Akron amp Canton However Sanders says the line began construction 1873 and then ran out of funds The route must have been different from the Valley Railway s route as Sanders says both were being built in 1873 11 b Formation of the Valley Railway Edit Whether there were antecedent roads or not the Valley Railway Company was incorporated in the state of Ohio on August 21 1871 10 13 The incorporators consisted of Henry Chisholm co founder and primary investor in the Cleveland Rolling Mill a steel mill James Farmer president of the Ohio National Bank Samuel Augustus Fuller founder of the Union Iron Works a Cleveland iron foundry David L King Nathan P Payne a Cleveland coal dealer and Warrick B Price Midwestern real estate developer and former secretary and treasurer of the Milwaukee and Beloit Railroad and the Aetna Iron and Nail Company 14 The state issued charter permitted the railroad to construct a line from the city of Cleveland on the shore of Lake Erie south southeast to the village of Bowerston Ohio 13 The sale of Valley Railway stock began in January 1872 The intent was to sell 150 000 3 700 000 in 2022 dollars in stock in both Akron and Canton and 500 000 12 200 000 in 2022 dollars in stock in Cleveland 15 King the chief organizer of the corporation 16 raised 191 700 4 400 000 in 2022 dollars from Akron area investors 10 Sales fell far short in Cleveland 15 even after the Cleveland Rolling Mill bought 50 000 1 200 000 in 2022 dollars worth of stock 17 The company was finally organized on April 24 1872 10 Its directors were Farmer King and Payne as well as George Cook Akron based director of agricultural implement manufacturer Aultman Miller amp Co and director of the First National Bank of Akron James A Saxton Canton based founder of the Stark County Bank John Frederick Seiberling Akron based agricultural implement manufacturer and Andros B Stone co owner of the Cleveland Rolling Mill 18 The newly constituted board on May 6 elected Farmer president King vice president and incorporator Warrick Price the secretary and treasurer 19 Constructing the Valley Railway EditThe board of directors appointed P H Dudley engineer for the city of Akron as chief engineer of the Valley Railway 20 Because the intent of the railroad was to carry very heavy loads of coal to Akron and Cleveland the board of directors mandated that the route follow a downhill grade between the two cities and that track curves be extremely wide and easy 21 The board contemplated building a narrow gauge railway because it would be cheaper Pressured by King the board instead opted for the more expensive standard gauge in order to better link with other railroads 15 Initial construction efforts Edit nbsp Stock certificate of the Valley RailwayThe route was surveyed and land purchased during 1872 On February 3 1873 the railway contracted with Arthur L Conger and Nicholas E Vansickle both of Akron to build the railroad 15 Ground was broken in Springfield Township in Summit County in March 1873 20 The work initially proceeded very swiftly By mid August two thirds of the line had been graded 20 from Canton north almost to Cleveland 9 contracts for all the bridges had been let and some bridges had even been partially completed 20 A financial panic hit in September 1873 creating worldwide economic havoc The Panic of 1873 forced the railroad to indefinitely suspend construction 9 on May 14 1874 15 By fall 1874 the railroad had run out of money and incurred debts of 150 000 1 300 000 in 2022 dollars To resolve the impasse and get construction going again David L King agreed to accept the position of president of the railway He demanded however that the members of the board of directors personally assume financial responsibility for paying off the company s liabilities The board agreed and King was elected on September 25 1874 20 To raise funds for construction King traveled to Europe in February 1875 but failed to sell any bonds 22 Two years passed before King was able to interest bankers and investors in Cleveland and New York City to purchase the 6 5 million 178 600 000 in 2022 dollars in bonds the railroad needed to complete work 20 Walsh amp Moynahan new contractors were hired and work resumed on August 7 1878 23 Once grading was complete track began to be laid The first rail was laid near Old Forge in Akron near the present day intersection of N Arlington Street and North Street 24 on October 26 1878 From Akron rails were laid north toward Cleveland and south toward Canton in Cleveland the company began laying rails south to meet the line coming up from Akron 20 Completing the line to Canton Edit Work was once again suspended on January 25 1879 20 in a dispute over the quality of work provided by Walsh amp Moynahan 23 A new contractor the firm of Strong amp Carey was hired and work resumed on June 3 1879 20 When the Valley ran low on cash again the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway LS amp MS loaned it about 250 000 7 900 000 in 2022 dollars to finish the track 25 c The 57 mile 92 km line 23 between Cleveland and Canton was completed on October 27 1879 26 The first train which carried important businessmen civic leaders clergy industrialists and politicians ran on the line on January 28 1880 11 20 Regular freight and passenger traffic began running on February 2 1880 3 20 Completing the line to Bowerston Edit Work on the remainder of the railroad slowed appreciably The Valley Railway crossed the Pennsylvania Railroad s Fort Wayne Line in Canton 27 and followed the valleys of various streams and creeks to reach Mineral City Ohio 28 which it did on July 15 1882 11 There it crossed the Pennsylvania Railroad s Tuscarawas Branch 29 It reached Valley Junction Zoarville Ohio a few months later 23 Track work beyond Valley Junction was delayed because the Valley Railway had yet to negotiate trackage rights with the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad W amp LE An agreement was finally reached in late 1882 and became effective January 1 1883 11 The remainder of the line was completed swiftly and in 1884 the Valley Railway between Bowerston and Valley Junction was completed linking the Valley Railway with the W amp LE and points east 20 At the time of its completion the Valley Railway had 75 miles 121 km of main line track 19 miles 31 km of branch track 35 miles 56 km of siding and a 2 mile 3 2 km spur from Mineral City to a nearby Sieberling owned coal mine 30 It linked northeast Ohio s three largest cities creating a regional transportation corridor 31 Valley Railway operational history Edit nbsp Restored Brecksville station on the Valley Railway in 2018Depots Edit The Valley Railway originally built 16 depots 23 North to south these were located at Cleveland 32 d Independence 23 Tinker s Creek 33 Brecksville 23 Boston Mills 23 Peninsula 23 Johnny Cake Lock on the Ohio and Erie Canal later renamed Unionville and still later Everett 34 23 35 e Hawkins later renamed Ira now no longer in existence 37 23 f Niles later renamed Botzum 38 23 Akron at Howard and Ridge Streets 39 Krumroy south of Akron on Krumroy Road between Marvo Drive and McChesney Road 40 41 Myersville 42 Green 34 In 1884 Akron granted permission for the Valley to build a spur into the heart of the city On this spur the railroad built a new larger passenger depot at the intersection of Canal and West Market Streets in 1887 43 The railroad continued to use the old station at Howard and Ridge Streets until 1971 39 Track bed lawsuit Edit A portion of the Valley Railway s route followed the bed of the abandoned Ohio and Erie Canal 15 The canal bed was originally owned by the state of Ohio The railroad asked the Cleveland City Council if it would lease the canal bed to the company and the council agreed to do so on March 24 1879 44 On October 31 1879 pursuant to previously enacted state law Governor Richard M Bishop transferred title to that portion of the canal within the city limits to the city of Cleveland On November 4 1879 the city formally leased the canal bed to the Valley Railway 45 for 99 years 15 Although the value of the land was estimated to be 280 000 7 200 000 in 2022 dollars the city agreed to a one time payment of 265 000 6 900 000 in 2022 dollars payable in Valley Railway corporate bonds 45 The railway filled the canal with ballast to create the track bed 15 The state of Ohio was displeased that the city had leased the canal bed and challenged the lease in 1879 A special joint committee was appointed by the Ohio Senate that year to examine the issue but concluded that the city properly held title to the canal bed and could do with it as it wished The joint committee s report was subsequently adopted by the Ohio Senate 45 This did not put an end to the dispute In late 1895 Ohio Attorney General John K Richards announced that in his opinion the lease to the railroad was illegal The state then sued to recover the canal bed and evict the railroad 46 The state legislature adopted a resolution later that year in which it expressed its opinion that the transfer of title to the city had been proper under state law 47 Discussions among the city state and Valley Railway continued until 1908 That year an appraiser once more found in favor of the railway Frustrated the state attorney general filed a motion in state district court in early March 1908 demanding title to the canal bed 48 In October of that year the railway filed a demurrer in the case 49 The case dragged on into 1910 The 1896 legislative resolution became an issue before the courts with the state attorney general arguing that a resolution was inadequate to affirm the city s title to the canal bed Only a bill could have confirmed title the state argued in March 1910 47 The district court held for the state of Ohio The railway appealed and an appellate court held for the state of Ohio The railway appealed to the Supreme Court of Ohio 50 In late January 1912 the Supreme Court of Ohio held in favor of the railway 51 52 Baltimore and Ohio takeover Edit nbsp The B amp O took majority ownership in the Valley Railway in 1889 The Valley Railroad found itself in tight competition with the Connotton Valley Railway 36 which opened in January 1882 53 g and had a similar route into the Tuscarawas County coal fields Yet coal was the key to the Valley s financial success By 1888 75 percent of the Valley Railway s income came from freight and 40 percent of its freight tonnage was coal 36 The Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad B amp O wanted to gain access to Cleveland but lacked a route of its own into the city 3 In the spring of 1889 Taintor amp Holt a New York City investment firm began buying up the Valley Railroad s stock on behalf of the B amp O The firm turned this stock over to the B amp O in the fall of 1889 20 With the assistance of Valley board member Sylvester T Everett and Valley president Jeptha Wade the B amp O obtained majority ownership of the Valley Railroad in late 1889 At the board of directors meeting on January 8 1890 the B amp O installed three of its own candidates on the Valley s board of directors Wade resigned as president and the new board elected Thomas M King a B amp O official from Baltimore president in his place 55 Sylvester Everett was elected the railroad s new vice president 56 nbsp 1895 bankruptcy Edit The Valley Railway was financially successful In its first decade the railroad s main cargoes were coal copper ore iron ore lime sand and stone but it carried much less agricultural produce than had been estimated 23 By 1892 four trains a day ran the entire length of the railroad with two additional trains running each day between Cleveland and Akron 20 Worldwide financial difficulties led to the Valley Railway s collapse in 1892 They began with the Baring crisis in the United Kingdom a banking panic which spread to the United States and caused a major recession in 1891 The Valley Railway went into receivership in 1892 56 57 The railroad might have recovered but the Panic of 1893 led to another significant downturn in both passengers and freight traffic 11 The railroad tried to build revenue by constructing a 3 mile 4 8 km branch from the main line at Willow Old Brecksville Road along Mill Creek to E 76th Street and then E 76th Street and Jones Road to Broadway Avenue This track was intended to serve the old Newburgh area s steel industry and became known as the Newburgh Branch 58 h Expansion proved unsuccessful The Valley Railway had been the primary means of travel from Canton to Akron to Cleveland but in 1895 the Northern Ohio Interurban Railroad opened 56 This inexpensive light rail service effectively destroyed the Valley Railway s passenger traffic between Cleveland and Akron 59 eliminating a major source of the company s revenue The Valley defaulted on its bills and interest payments and went into full bankruptcy on August 2 1895 60 The company was reorganized as the Cleveland Terminal and Valley Railroad CT amp V on October 3 1895 11 As part of the reorganization the Valley transferred property worth about 250 000 8 800 000 in 2022 dollars to the LS amp MS as payment for the 1879 loan 25 Cleveland Terminal and Valley Railway EditNew Cleveland passenger and freight facilities Edit nbsp New 1896 freight depot nbsp 1896 Riverbed St freight dock with McMyler rotary coal hoist nbsp New 1898 passenger depotIn February 1896 the CT amp V announced it would construct new larger freight and passenger facilities in Cleveland to accommodate the increased business it was doing in the city The existing passenger depot at the foot of Seneca Street now W 3rd Street would be demolished and a 500 foot 150 m long 125 foot 38 m deep two story station 32 built on the same spot 61 A 700 foot 210 m long train shed parallel to the rear of the depot would also be built A trestle would bring the trains up to the level of the station and train shed The CT amp V also acquired 2 500 feet 760 m of riverfront 32 along Columbus Road south of Center Street 62 The company said it would build a second freight station and extensive new docks there 32 complete with McMyler 63 rotary car dumpers To connect the new freight station and docks with the main tracks the railway asked the city to close Lime Street The total cost of the project was estimated at 500 000 17 600 000 in 2022 dollars 32 The freight station which also featured derricks to assist with the loading of heavy cargo was completed in June 1896 and the old freight depot retained as a storage facility 62 The steel frame station was 50 feet 15 m deep and 500 feet 150 m long with walls and roofing of sheet metal There were 25 loading bays on the dock side alone and traveling overhead cranes facilitated the movement of heavy loads onto pallets or into freight wagons 63 As part of the freight expansion the CT amp V built a second freight depot and docks on the Cuyahoga River between Main Avenue and Cathan Avenue just west of the Superior Avenue Viaduct Bridge The city of Cleveland however wished to widen the Cuyahoga River by 80 feet 24 m at this point The city and the railway came to an agreement whereby the city would close West River Street and give this 80 feet 24 m of land to the railroad The 80 feet 24 m of land on which the CT amp V docks sat would be removed to allow for the widened river channel Since the river was a highway under state law the railway agreed to pay an assessment of about 16 500 600 000 in 2022 dollars for highway improvements in return the city agreed to rebuild the CT amp V s docks 64 The new passenger depot began construction in September 1897 Designed by local structural engineer A Lincoln Hyde and architect William Stillman Dutton 61 65 in a modified Gothic Revival style 65 it was built by contractor C N Griffin The structure was much different than originally projected just 100 foot 30 m long and 43 foot 13 m deep but with three stories rather than two 61 The roof was of slate mined in Virginia 63 The building s steel frame 65 had a first floor facade of rock faced blue sandstone while the upper floors were of buff pressed brick 61 trimmed with stone Turrets at the corners helped to strengthen the building and clock tower illuminated by floodlights rose from the steeply pitched roof 65 The clock mechanism was designed and built by the local firm of Scribner and Loehr 63 The baggage room on the lower level had an asphalt floor 65 At the main entrance on the first floor was a vestibule from which passengers could pass into the lobby 61 Men s and women s waiting rooms were located on either side of the lobby 65 First story flooring consisted of mosaic tile 61 manufactured and installed by the Newcastle Block Pavement Co of Pittsburgh 63 The walls were painted a reddish orange and featured wood wainscoting painted dark green 65 with oak trim and moldings on the walls and ceiling 61 An elevator and stairs led from the vestibule to the upper floors 61 The second floor housed the CT amp V s corporate headquarters and featured mosaic tile flooring and walls painted ecru with oak trim A large brick pillar running through the building to the foundation supported the heavy safes in the auditor s and engineer s offices 65 The third floor contained the railway s engineering and telegraphy offices 61 while the attic was used for records storage 65 The entire interior was electrically lit The train shed was just 300 foot 91 m and 90 foot 27 m wide The cost of the new passenger station was estimated at 100 000 3 500 000 in 2022 dollars 61 The train shed behind the new station was only the second of its kind erected in the United States Constructed by the Massillon Bridge Company it consisted of two levels one for the receiving of incoming and outgoing passenger traffic and the other for the making up of trains and the loading of special trains 63 nbsp System map from 1898Route changes trackage right leases and new spurs Edit With the depression caused by the Panic of 1896 ending the CT amp V did very well financially It gave the Wheeling amp Lake Erie trackage rights over the entire length of the CT amp V 66 built a new freight depot in Cleveland on Seneca Street near the Central Viaduct a block north of what is now W 3rd Street and Harrison Street 67 and purchased 3 4 acres 14 000 m2 between end of its tracks and Lake Erie for use as a rail yard This land was obtained from the city of Cleveland for 6 000 200 000 in 2022 dollars The CT amp V subsequently built up the land so it would no longer flood 68 On November 9 1898 the Sandyville and Waynesburg Railroad was chartered to build a line between the C amp TV line at Sandyville northeast about 3 miles 4 8 km to Waynesburg Ohio The line was completed on July 1 1899 and leased to the CT amp V 69 The line was originally intended to be 9 5 miles 15 3 km long 70 In April 1899 the Davis Railway Co constructed a 3 5 mile 5 6 km extension of the spur at Mineral City This branch pushed east along Huff Run to Linden an unincorporated crossroads hamlet 71 and the Davis Mine No 2 coal mine The entire 4 9 mile 7 9 km length of the spur from Valley Junction to the mine became known as the Huff Run Branch Mining was so important in the area that the Huff Run Branch later added 2 63 miles 4 23 km of second track and 7 53 miles 12 12 km of sidings 72 The B amp O was threatened with losing access to many of the southern Ohio markets it relied on in 1899 The first threat came from the Cleveland and Marietta Railway In 1872 it built a branch line from Marietta Ohio to the B amp O main line at Harmer Junction 73 This allowed B amp O and CT amp V freight to be shipped on the Cleveland and Marietta C amp M directly to Cleveland or to be transferred at Canton and shipped to Cleveland The Cleveland and Marietta said it would no longer accept freight for either railroad beginning January 1 1900 74 That same year the Wheeling amp Lake Erie acquired the Cleveland Canton and Southern Railroad whose track from Cleveland to Canton and then to Coshocton and Zanesville The W amp LE said it would cancel the CT amp V s trackage rights 3 which threatened to cut the CT amp V completely off from all southern routes and markets In response the CT amp V began to swiftly survey a route from Valley Junction to Canal Dover now Dover 75 and then to Newark Ohio 74 76 which would give it a link to the B amp O s main line and threaten to eat significantly into traffic on both the C amp M and the W amp LE To avoid construction of an independently owned new main line the Pennsylvania Railroad agreed to give the B amp O subsidiary trackage rights between Valley Junction and Canal Dover At Canal Dover the CT amp V connected with the Lake Shore and Tuscarawas Valley Railroad now operating as the Cleveland Lorain and Wheeling Railroad 3 The CT amp V thrived financially and so did business along its route and the railway expanded to meet this demand In 1900 the Cleveland Boston Bag Co built a large mill near the tiny hamlet of Boston Mills to take advantage of the railroad Boston Mills soon grew into a town 33 In 1904 the railroad built a 4 mile 6 4 km spur from Willow the modern intersection of Fuhrmeyer Road and Old Brecksville Road along Mill Creek to connect with the Cleveland Short Line Railway near what is now E 73rd Street and Deveny Avenue in Cleveland 77 That same year the railway spent 115 000 3 700 000 in 2022 dollars strengthening all the bridges along its route and even rebuilding some older ones so that it could haul heavier loads and use new heavier more powerful locomotives 78 In 1905 the Jaite Paper Mill opened 2 miles 3 2 km north of Boston Mills to take advantage of open land near the railroad as well 79 New B amp O rail yard Edit nbsp B amp O rail yard in 1946 top center with roundhouse visibleIn 1906 the B amp O closed the existing CT amp V roundhouse 80 and built a 400 000 13 000 000 in 2022 dollars much larger roundhouse and rail yard on W 3rd Street in Cleveland The 10 stall semicircular roundhouse measured 280 feet 85 m on the outside and 145 feet 44 m on the inside and cost 45 347 1 500 000 in 2022 dollars Another 200 000 6 500 000 in 2022 dollars was spent building the rail yard 81 Other improvements included 81 A 12 500 400 000 in 2022 dollars 150 by 50 foot 46 by 15 m 14 foot 4 3 m deep cinder pit located about 85 feet 26 m south of the new roundhouse A 26 370 900 000 in 2022 dollars 725 by 30 foot 221 0 by 9 1 m sand house and coal tipple located south of the new cinder pit A two story brick resthouse for trainmen northwest of the roundhouse with second floor reading and sleeping rooms A one story machine blacksmith and engine and boiler repair shop made of brick attached to the north end of the roundhouse An 11 000 400 000 in 2022 dollars 120 by 30 foot 36 6 by 9 1 m storehouse and oilhouse north of the roundhouse and 145 000 4 700 000 in 2022 dollars in infrastructure improvements which included a steam heating plant smokestack fresh water system drain and sewer system blow off lines and two 50 000 US gallon 190 000 L water tanks Bridge replacements in Cleveland Edit nbsp A freighter wedged against the CTV s Center Street swing bridge in 1904 The company s lawsuit over damage to the bridge went to the U S Supreme Court A controversy broke out in 1905 over whether the CT amp V would be required to replace its railroad bridge over the Cuyahoga River At issue was a swing bridge over the Old Ship Channel of the Cuyahoga River i The Constitution of the United States and various federal court rulings gave the federal government control over all navigable waters 83 and the United States Army Corps of Engineers tasked under federal law with improving navigable waters asserted the right to regulate the bridge The Corps wanted the bridge removed or replaced since the center pier of the bridge hindered traffic in the Old Ship Channel and the embankment spans when open used up space which the Corps wished to use for new docks The CT amp V however argued that the 1825 changes to the river rendered the Old Ship Channel and the New Ship Channel man made waterways and hence not subject to federal jurisdiction 84 Local hearings were held which documented the hindrance to water traffic 85 and the railroad agreed in April 1905 to remove the swing bridge no later than April 1 1907 86 Secretary of War William Howard Taft then intervened ordering the bridge gone by April 1 1906 87 Although the railroad objected to the tight timeframe 88 it went ahead with plans for the new bridge as ordered The railroad proposed a replacing the existing structure with a Scherzer rolling lift bridge a plan which was approved in August 1905 89 The new bridge opened in September 1906 Designed by the Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge Co manufactured by the King Bridge Co and erected by the Pittsburgh Construction Co the double track 230 foot 70 m bridge 90 91 cost 180 000 5 900 000 in 2022 dollars 92 The B amp O of its own accord then rebuilt two more bridges in Cleveland The first was over the Cuyahoga River near what is now Quigley Road and W 3rd Street 91 The 230 foot 70 m rolling lift bridge 93 was built by the King Bridge Co and completed in July 94 Planning for replacement of a second bridge this one spanning the Cuyahoga at what is now Carter Road on the west bank and W 3rd Street on the east bank began in June 1908 95 Originally this rolling lift bridge was to be 160 feet 49 m long and cost 200 000 6 500 000 in 2022 dollars 96 Construction of the bridge was delayed however when the city of Cleveland began planning for a new viaduct over the Cuyahoga River valley near the same location By November 1908 the city had decided to widen the river at this location and asked the railroad to construct a longer bridge 97 Discussions between the city and railroad ensued and it was not until August 1909 that both sides agreed to a 275 000 9 000 000 in 2022 dollars 200 foot 61 m long rolling lift bridge Built by the Pennsylvania Steel Co 98 construction took nearly 18 months Taking into account its piers abutments and approaches it was the largest rolling lift bridge in the world 95 99 The company also repaired a swing bridge just downstream from what is now the Center Street Bridge This swing bridge was severely damaged when floods sent three ships crashing against the bridge 100 The CT amp V sued for damages and the case went to the United States Supreme Court The Supreme Court held in Cleveland Terminal and Valley R Co v Cleveland S S Co 208 U S 316 1908 that bridge piers bridge protective pilings and docks were not aids to navigation and thus damage to them by a ship even if on navigable waters was not a cause for action under United States maritime law 101 B amp O takeover EditIn June 1909 the B amp O assumed active management of the CT amp V 11 102 This ended a process initiated in 1901 when the parent company began unifying operations with the subsidiary beginning with a single ticket structure 103 During this period of active management the B amp O built a CT amp V rail yard at Canal Dover in 1911 104 105 The B amp O fully absorbed the CT amp V in 1915 58 106 107 CT amp V operations under the B amp O Edit nbsp The CT amp V s Magnolia Branch in green abandoned in 1924In the early 20th century the B amp O offered three round trip passenger trains a day between Cleveland and Canton on the CT amp V tracks One of these continued to Marietta 108 The high frequency of passenger trains was needed because the B amp O s Chicago to Jersey City service ran through both Akron and Wheeling The connection between Cleveland and Akron took on additional importance when in January 1918 the B amp O ceased to run passenger trains through Wheeling and all of its passenger service went through Akron 3 The B amp O the CT amp V line between Akron and Cleveland early in the 20th century to make it a better freight route 54 However the rapid availability of the automobile led to severe losses in passenger revenues and the increasing use of trucks to move bulk goods significantly reduced freight traffic 109 Passenger service to Marietta ended on July 18 1933 and passenger service to Valley Junction ended on September 30 1934 108 Slowly the B amp O began reducing the reach of the old Valley Railway The B amp O abandoned the Magnolia Branch in January 1924 110 It abandoned its track between Valley Junction and Mineral City in 1936 due to construction of the Dover Dam flood control project 111 and realigned another 2 5 miles 4 0 km of track to avoid the new reservoir 112 About 5 25 miles 8 45 km of track were also realigned due to construction of the Wills Creek Dam 113 8 1 miles 13 0 km of track realigned due to construction of the Beach City Dam 114 and 5 3 miles 8 5 km of track realigned due to construction of the Bolivar Dam 115 j The new route involved building a four span bridge over Sandy Creek At Mineral City the CT amp V was forced to build two wooden trestles to accommodate flood control projects One of these was 860 feet 260 m long and crossed a tributary of Huff Run as well as two roads 28 The CT amp V abandoned its main line north of Walnut Street in Massillon due to straightening of the Tuscarawas River and converted its industrial spur on the city s east side into a new main line 116 k The railroad abandoned and removed the Huff Run Branch from Valley Junction to Mineral City in 1938 following eight years of disuse 118 In June 1934 the CT amp V moved its passenger station to Cleveland s new Terminal Tower The 1897 passenger station on Canal Road was converted into a freight depot 58 The CT amp V realigned the entire 14 4 mile 23 2 km route between Beach City and Mineral City and 1 5 miles 2 4 km around East Sparta in 1938 to accommodate the Muskingum River Conservation District s flood control initiatives 119 Passenger travel on the former CT amp V increased somewhat during World War II but declined sharply again afterward 120 The B amp O ceased all passenger service on the line on December 7 1962 The last passenger train to run on the old CT amp V route was the Cleveland Night Express which provided overnight service to Baltimore 58 It abandoned the Newburgh Branch in 1964 Post B amp O history of the line EditThe Chesapeake and Ohio Railway C amp O took control of the B amp O on February 4 1963 The two railroads retained their separate identities until merging into the Chessie System on June 15 1973 108 A scenic railroad began operating on a portion of the old Valley Railway in 1975 The scenic railroad was first conceived in 1967 With little freight and no passenger traffic on the line Henry Lucas an official with the Cuyahoga County Fair and Siegfried Buerling director of the Hale Farm historic site suggested that a tourist railroad be allowed to use the tracks The B amp O refused Backers of a scenic railroad continued to press ahead and in 1975 the Chessie System gave its approval 121 The Cuyahoga Valley Line Scenic Railroad 120 now known as the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad began operation in June 1975 122 The Chessie System merged with the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad in November 1980 to form CSX 123 In 1984 CSX abandoned the remainder of the Huff Run Branch as well as all of its line between Sandyville and Mineral City CSX sales of the line Edit nbsp A Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad train idles at Rockside Road in Independence Ohio in 2017On September 5 1984 CSX announced it would abandon the Valley Railway track between Akron and Independence 121 The National Park Service subsequently began negotiating to buy these 26 miles 42 km 124 of track to add to the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area 121 which had been established on December 29 1974 125 and became a national park on October 11 2000 126 The sale was finalized on September 28 1987 121 The northern terminus of the Park Service s track is at Independence Granger Road and Interstate 77 approximately 1 5 miles 2 4 km north of the Rockside station after which CSX resumes ownership of the track 127 128 The southern terminus of the Park Service s track is at the Akron station at which point CSX ownership of the track resumed 128 129 CSX subsequently sold two more portions of the old Valley Railway In October 1992 CSX sold 12 26 miles 19 73 km 130 of track between Canton and Sandyville to a new Wheeling amp Lake Erie Railroad which had recently been spun off by the Norfolk Southern Railway In May 2000 Akron s METRO Regional Transit Authority purchased 24 miles 39 km of track between Akron and Canton from CSX in May 2000 131 l Metro provides trackage rights to the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad and two freight railroads the W amp LE and the Akron Barberton Cluster Railway 131 m CSX still owns and uses for freight the remainder of the Valley Railway which it calls the Cleveland Terminal and Valley Subdivision between Independence and Cleveland It is unclear when the 0 6 miles 0 97 km of track between the end of the line on Whiskey Island and Literary Road near W 3rd Street or the 26 miles 42 km of track between Valley Junction and Bowerston was abandoned The portion between Literary Road and Quigley Road near Interstate 490 about 0 4 miles 0 64 km was abandoned in 1983 Freight train use of the remaining portion of CT amp V Subdivision is light and as of 1992 the track was not in good enough condition to accommodate passenger trains 133 The Valley Railway line as completed Edit nbsp The Valley Railway s Huff Run Branch in green in 1912As of 1906 the Valley Railroad had 75 47 miles 121 46 km of main track and 4 48 miles 7 21 km of secondary track 1 79 64 miles 128 17 km of main and secondary track siding and yards 11 3 miles 18 2 km of branch and spur track and 8 95 miles 14 40 km of branch and spur track siding and yards 134 About 7 miles 11 km of track were in the Cleveland city limits 58 The railroad had three branch lines the Huff Run Branch about 1 5 miles 2 4 km from Mineral City east to Lindentree the Magnolia Branch about 2 88 miles 4 63 km from Sandyville along Sandy Creek to Magnolia 135 n and the Newburg Branch about 3 miles 4 8 km from Granger Road following Mill Creek to Broadway Avenue 58 The railroad had a number of spurs which served the Independence stone quarry o the Schumacher State Quarry at Deep Lock p the Lawson Waterman quarry at Peninsula q the Lawson Waterman quarry at Deep Lock r the Jaite Paper Mill at Boston Mills downtown Akron 43 and the Newburgh Line through and north of what is now Bacci Park The railroad also owned at least three rail yards The first was the Cleveland terminal yard built at the end of the line opposite Whiskey Island in downtown Cleveland 68 It was replaced in 1906 by the B amp O Clark Avenue yard on W 3rd Street 81 The third rail yard was located in Dover Ohio 105 It is unclear when this yard was abandoned Historic sites and districts Edit nbsp The Jaite Company Store at the Jaite Mill Historic DistrictThe Valley Railway Historic District encompasses the former Valley Railway from Independence to downtown Akron It was added to the National Register of Historic Places NRHP in 1985 140 Much of the railroad runs parallel or adjacent to the Ohio and Erie Canal added to the NRHP in 1966 141 The railroad tracks also pass through the Everett Historic District added to the NRHP in 1993 142 and the Peninsula Village Historic District added to the NRHP in 1974 143 and adjacent to the Boston Mills Historic District added to the NRHP in 1992 144 and the Cascade Locks Historic District added to the NRHP in 1992 145 A Valley Railway spur ran to the Jaite Mill Historic District added to the NRHP in 1979 146 and the railway also passed close to Hale Farm and Village added to the NRHP in 1973 147 See also EditCleveland railroad historyReferences EditNotes The state of Ohio lists no charter for an Akron and Canton Railway or any similarly named effort between January 1 1867 and June 30 1871 4 5 6 7 8 Elsewhere Sanders says that another Akron and Canton Railroad was planned in the 1830s but this project was never begun 12 The LS amp MS had close relations with Standard Oil and shipped much of its oil The Valley Railway s tracks ran past Standard Oil s large Cleveland refinery and linked with the LS amp MS in downtown Cleveland 25 The passenger depot was located on the south side of Canal Road just before it met Columbus Road The company also owned about 1 900 feet 580 m of docks on the Cuyahoga River just south of the passenger depot A separate freight station existed on Merwin Avenue between West and James Streets 32 Unionville was renamed in honor of Sylvester T Everett the Valley Railroad s vice president and treasurer 36 Ira was located at the intersection of Ira Road and Riverview Road 35 The Connotton Valley Railroad reached Mogadore a hamlet east of Akron in 1881 Cleveland in 1882 and Zanesville in 1889 It converted to standard gauge on November 18 1888 and was renamed the Cleveland Canton and Southern Railroad on May 17 1890 It went into receivership on September 15 1893 and was acquired by the W amp LE on August 5 1899 54 It included two southwest spurs at Old Brecksville Road a spur east through Bacci Park almost to Donovan Drive and two spurs at about Bletch Ct one parallel and north to the branch and the other east and then south along Warner Road When white settlers arrived in Ohio in 1796 the Cuyahoga River followed the Old Ship Channel also known as the Old River Bed before turning sharply to enter Lake Erie about 1 mile 1 6 km west of its current mouth The twisting mouth of the river inhibited ship traffic upstream however and in 1825 the current straight mouth of the river was dug This new mouth of the Cuyahoga was widened in 1854 Over time sand bars built up which sealed off the old mouth of the river from the lake 82 The work extended from two miles north of East Sparta Ohio to a mile south of Sandyville Ohio 115 The railroad anticipated realigning another 5 86 miles 9 43 km of track due to construction of Freeport Reservoir 117 but county commissioners decided not to build that dam 116 This track begins at Howard Street in Akron at the southern terminus of the National Park Service track It travels 1 6 miles 2 6 km east 4 76 miles 7 66 km south and then 3 1 miles 5 0 km southeast to the city of Green Ohio It continues another 11 7 miles 18 8 km southeast before entering Canton The line travels about 3 9 miles 6 3 km through Canton before terminating at the Canton Crossing Diamond where it connects to the W amp LE and the Norfolk Southern 132 W amp LE s trackage rights stem from a 1992 lease of 10 25 miles 16 50 km 130 of this track between Canton and Aultman 108 Although the CT amp V leased a line from Magnolia to Waynesburg 69 it did not own this track and thus is not included in the description of the Magnolia Line in this article Located at what is now 8900 Hemlock Road in Independence Ohio 136 Located at what is now Deep Lock Quarry Metro Park at 5779 Riverview Road in Summit County 137 Located at 1980 West Streetsboro Road in Peninsula Ohio 138 Also part of Deep Lock Quarry Metro Park 139 Citations a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 p 226 a b Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xiii a b c d e f Sanders 2007 p 9 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868a pp generally Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868b pp generally Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1870 p generally Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1871 p generally Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1872 p generally a b c Fess 1937 p 174 a b c d Lane 1892 p 631 a b c d e f g Sanders 2009 p 8 Sanders 2007 p 7 a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1883 p 375 Valley Railway Company The Pittsburgh Commercial September 9 1871 p 2 Retrieved October 17 2017 a b c d e f g h Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xv Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xii The Valley Railway The Plain Dealer February 26 1872 p 3 The Valley Railway The Plain Dealer April 25 1872 p 3 The Valley Railway The Plain Dealer May 7 1872 p 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lane 1892 p 632 Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xiv Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 pp xv xvi a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xvi Price 2015 p 22 a b c Big Transfer of Land The Plain Dealer March 4 1896 p 10 The Valley Railway Completed Between Cleveland and Canton The Plain Dealer October 28 1879 p 1 Sanders 2009 p 45 a b Sanders 2009 p 72 Sanders 2009 p 74 Lane 1892 p 633 Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p x a b c d e f Immense Docks The Plain Dealer February 25 1896 p 1 a b Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xvii a b Lane 1892 p 655 a b Kovacs Rosemary April 19 1973 Map and Memories Preserve Old Towns The Plain Dealer p A15 a b c Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xvix Lane 1892 p 133 Lane 1892 p 640 a b Sanders 2007 p 11 Lane 1892 p 988 Ohio Co operative Topographic Survey 1911 p 175 Lane 1892 pp 655 800 a b Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 pp xvi xvii The Valley Railway The Plain Dealer March 25 1879 p 1 a b c Not State Land The Plain Dealer April 17 1896 Perfectly Safe The Plain Dealer January 2 1896 p 3 a b State Opens Case To Oust Railroad The Plain Dealer March 10 1910 p 5 Questions State s Right to Be Suing The Plain Dealer March 11 1908 p 5 Railway Claims Canal The Plain Dealer October 21 1908 p 5 Little Stories Of Ohio Capital The Plain Dealer December 21 1911 p 12 Holds Cases Different The Plain Dealer February 5 1912 p 7 Cleveland Terminal amp Valley Railroad Company et al v The State ex rel 85 O S 251 Ohio 1912 Kennedy 1885 p 30 a b Sanders 2007 p 10 The Deal Clinched The Plain Dealer January 9 1890 p 2 a b c Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xx The Valley Dies The Plain Dealer June 17 1892 p 8 a b c d e f Baltimore amp Ohio Railroad Encyclopedia of Cleveland 2017 Retrieved October 25 2017 Bruce 1952 pp 407 408 To Be Sold The Plain Dealer August 3 1895 p 6 a b c d e f g h i j The New Cleveland Terminal amp Valley Depot The Plain Dealer September 5 1897 p 1 a b New Freight House The Plain Dealer June 14 1896 p 6 a b c d e f The Railway Agent 1898 p 85 Came to Terms The Plain Dealer November 21 1896 p 1 a b c d e f g h i The Railway Agent 1898 p 83 Over the Valley The Plain Dealer January 2 1897 p 10 New Depot The Plain Dealer April 1 1897 p 1 a b A Big Contract The Plain Dealer June 8 1897 p 10 a b Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 p 128 Construction The Railway Age March 17 1890 p 190 Retrieved July 3 2018 The Work in Progress The Railway Age April 7 1899 p 264 Retrieved July 3 2018 Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company 1902 p 64 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 pp 96 97 a b Valley to Be Extended The Plain Dealer December 20 1899 p 6 Miller 2000 p 75 New Roads and Projects Railway and Engineering Review December 23 1899 p 727 Railroad News The Plain Dealer May 21 1904 p 5 Railroad News The Plain Dealer November 25 1904 p 3 Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xviii Sanders 2014 p 15 a b c B amp O Plans To Spend 400 000 The Plain Dealer August 12 1906 p 1 Mansfield 1899 pp 299 300 Linsley amp Franzini 1974 p 108 Couch W S February 3 1905 Have An Army of Witnesses The Plain Dealer pp 1 2 Hearing On B amp O Bridge The Plain Dealer March 12 1905 p 2 Agrees To Remove Bridge The Plain Dealer April 4 1905 p 12 Bridge Must Go The Plain Dealer May 11 1905 p 3 Railroads Want Delay The Plain Dealer May 12 1905 p 3 Plans Are Approved The Plain Dealer August 10 1905 p 5 Camp Walter Mason March 23 1907 New Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge at Cleveland The Railway and Engineering Review pp 257 258 Retrieved October 25 2017 a b Bluestone 1978 p 86 Railroad News The Plain Dealer September 8 1905 p 3 Big Lift Bridge to Span Cuyahoga River The Plain Dealer April 19 1907 p 10 Bridge Is Completed The Plain Dealer July 31 1907 p 12 a b Bluestone 1978 p 96 B amp O Won t Wait For New Viaduct The Plain Dealer June 25 1908 p 12 Wants Change In New Bridge Plans The Plain Dealer November 12 1908 p 12 To Replace Old Bridge The Plain Dealer August 9 1909 p 10 New B amp O Bridge Finished The Plain Dealer March 12 1911 p A6 Secretary of War 1904 pp 3806 3807 Cleveland Terminal and Valley R Co v Cleveland S S Co 208 U S 316 U S 1908 Metzger amp Bobel 2009 p 174 Many Important Changes The Plain Dealer June 16 1901 p 8 Sanders 2009 p 71 a b Yards at Canal Dover Industrial World April 24 1911 p 489 Retrieved October 25 2017 Begin Fight On Ohio Slag Rates The Plain Dealer November 4 1915 p 16 Ori 2006 p 11 a b c d Sanders 2009 p 61 Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 pp xxi xxii Legal Notices New Philadelphia Daily Times December 28 1923 p 7 Order Magnolia Branch R R Abandoned New Philadelphia Daily Times January 29 1924 p 8 Retrieved November 13 2018 53 Miles of Railway Relocated in Ohio Flood Control Project Railway Age September 5 1936 pp 345 350 Engineers Get Ready for Construction Dover Dam Zanesville Times Recorder April 6 1935 p 1 Chief Railroad Appraisal Engineer Named Zanesville Times Recorder February 25 1935 p 1 Turn First Dirt Today in Building Wills Creek Dam Zanesville Times Recorder March 12 1935 pp 1 5 Canton Firm is Low Bidder on Rail Reloation Zanesville Times Recorder May 8 1935 p 4 a b Bid of Local Company Low Massillon Evening Independent July 11 1935 p 2 a b Straightening of Tuscarawas River In City Approved Massillon Evening Independent April 16 1935 p 1 1 850 000 River Straightening Project for Massillon Massillon Evening Independent February 14 1935 pp 1 8 May Abandon Line Massillon Evening Independent November 5 1937 p 22 B amp O To Drop Branch Marion Star December 22 1937 p 2 Railway Construction in the United States Railway Age January 7 1939 p 74 Retrieved November 14 2018 a b Tamburro amp Galonska 2002 p xxii a b c d Sanders 2007 p 93 Chugging Out of History The Plain Dealer June 1 1975 p AA2 Ellison Bruce November 23 1975 Overcrowded National Parks Create an Operational Tightrope The Plain Dealer p E2 Chessie Seaboard Merge Into Largest Rail Network The Plain Dealer November 3 1980 p E10 Volpe National Transportation Systems Center 2013 p 1 Brazaitis Thomas J December 29 1974 Ford Signs Cuyahoga Valley Park Bill The Plain Dealer pp A1 A5 Hetter Katia June 13 2013 Cuyahoga Valley A spiritual retreat CNN Retrieved October 25 2017 Surface Transportation Board 1998 p 5 311 a b Volpe National Transportation Systems Center 2013 p 50 Parsons Brinckerhoff 2002 p 3 32 a b Surface Transportation Board Department of Transportation STB Finance Docket No 34341 Wheeling amp Lake Erie Railway Company Acquisition and Operation Exemption CSX Transportation Inc 68 FR 59680 October 16 2003 a b Bergmann Associates 2012 p 46 Bergmann Associates 2012 p 28 Burnett Thomas M September 7 1992 Plan to Extend Rail Is Picking Up Steam The Plain Dealer p B2 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 p 227 Sanders 2009 p 62 Zurick Maura July 14 2014 200 years of Independence The Plain Dealer Retrieved October 26 2017 Deep Lock Quarry Summit County Parks 2017 Retrieved October 26 2017 Fellenstein Stephanie July 8 2015 Oh the places we ll go Gatehouse Media Retrieved October 26 2017 Downing Bob March 2 2008 UA team unearths historic sites Akron Beacon Journal Retrieved October 26 2017 Valley Railway Historic District Ohio and Erie Canal Everett Historic District Peninsula Village Historic District Boston Mills Historic District Cascade Locks Historic District Jaite Mill Historic District Jonathan Hale HomesteadBibliography EditBaltimore and Ohio Railroad Company 1902 Seventy Sixth Annual Report of the President and Directors to the Stockholders of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company for the Year Ended June 30 1902 Report Baltimore Md Press of The John D Lucas Printing Company Bergmann Associates February 2012 Metro Rail Freight System Study PDF Report Akron Ohio Metro Regional Transit Authority Bluestone Daniel M ed 1978 Cleveland An Inventory of Historic Engineering and Industrial Sites Washington D C Historic American Engineering Record U S Department of the Interior hdl 2027 uiug 30112024125988 Bruce Alfred W 1952 The Steam Locomotive in America New York Bonanza Books Fess Simeon D 1937 Ohio Historical Gazetteer Chicago Lewis Publishing Co Kennedy J H November 1885 Early Railroad Interests of Cleveland The National Magazine pp 26 42 Retrieved July 26 2017 Lane Samuel A 1892 Fifty Years and Over of Akron and Summit County Akron Ohio Beacon Job Dept Linsley Ray K Franzini Joseph B 1974 Water Law In Black Peter E ed Readings in Soil and Water Conservation New York MSS Information Corp ISBN 9780842252041 Mansfield John Brandt 1899 History of the Great Lakes Volume I Chicago J H Beers amp Co Metzger Lynn Bobel Peg 2009 Canal Fever The Ohio amp Erie Canal From Waterway to Canalway Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9781606350133 Miller Fred 2000 Tuscarawas County Ohio Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738507408 A Model Passenger Station September 1898 pp 82 85 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the Year 1867 Columbus Ohio L D Myers amp Bro State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1868 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs of the State of Ohio With Tabulations and Deductions From Reports of the Railroad Corporations of the State for the Year Ending June 30 1868 Columbus Ohio Columbus Printing Company State Printers hdl 2027 uc1 b2896930 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1870 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs of the State of Ohio With Tabulations and Deductions From Reports of the Railroad Corporations of the State for the Year Ending June 30 1869 Columbus Ohio Columbus Printing Company State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1871 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs for the Year Ending June 30 1870 In Two Volumes Volume II Columbus Ohio Nevins and Myers State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1872 Fifth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs of the State of Ohio for the Governor for the Year Ending June 30 1871 Columbus Ohio Nevins and Myers State Printers Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1883 Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs of Ohio for the Year Ending June 30 1882 Columbus Ohio Myers Brothers State Printers hdl 2027 uc1 b2896936 Ohio Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs 1906 Thirty Eighth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Railroads and Telegraphs to the Governor of the State of Ohio for the Year 1905 Springfield Ohio Springfield Publishing Company Ohio Co operative Topographic Survey 1911 Progress Report of the Ohio Co operative Topographic Survey to January 1 1910 Springfield Ohio The Springfield Publishing Company Ori David P 2006 Chessie System St Paul Minn Voyageur ISBN 9780760323397 Parsons Brinckerhoff April 2002 Canton Akron Cleveland Inter Regional Travel Corridor Major Investment Study Final Report PDF Report Akron Ohio Retrieved October 26 2017 Price Mark J 2015 Lost Akron Charleston S C The History Press ISBN 9781626195769 Reese John S 2002 Guide Book for the Tourist and Traveler Over the Valley Railway The Short Line Between Cleveland Akron and Canton Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873387354 Sanders Craig 2007 Akron Railroads Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738541419 Sanders Craig 2014 Cleveland Mainline Railroads Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467111379 Sanders Craig 2009 Canton Area Railroads Charleston S C Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738561110 Secretary of War 1904 Appendix AAA Technical Details of Engineering Methods on Fortifications Rivers and Harbors and Other Works Annual Reports for the War Department for the Year Ended June 30 1904 Volume VIII Report of the Chief of Engineers Part 4 Report Washington D C Government Printing Office Surface Transportation Board 1998 Final Environmental Impact Statement Finance Docket No 33388 Proposed Conrail Acquisition Volume 3 Chapter 5 Report Washington D C U S Government Printing Office hdl 2027 ien 35556030194138 Tamburro Sam Galonska Juliet 2002 Introduction Guide Book for the Tourist and Traveler Over the Valley Railway The Short Line Between Cleveland Akron and Canton Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 9780873387354 Volpe National Transportation Systems Center July 2013 Cuyahoga Valley National Park Comprehensive Rail Study PMIS No 160989 PDF Report National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Retrieved October 26 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Valley Railway amp oldid 1134117167, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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